4.6 Article

Mechanisms of shale gas generation and accumulation in the Ordovician Wufeng-Longmaxi Formation, Sichuan Basin, SW China

Journal

PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 69-78

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S1876-3804(17)30009-5

Keywords

Sichuan Basin; Fuling gas field; shale gas; hydrocarbon-forming organisms; reservoir space; occurrence state; sealing mechanism

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1663202]

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The source rock quality, organic pore structure, occurrence state and sealing mechanisms of shale gas in the Ordovician Wufeng -SilurianLongmaxi Formation (O(3)w-S(1)l), Fuling region, Sichuan Basin were studied using a series of techniques including ultra- microscopic organic maceral identification, FIB-SEM, high temperature/pressure isothermal adsorption and isotopic age dating of noble gas. The results show that: (1) O(3)w-S(1)l organic-rich shale was mainly formed in a sedimentary environment with high productivity in surface water and hypoxia in bottom water, which can be divided into two sections according to TOC. The lower section (TOC >= 3%) is mainly composed of graptolite, phytoplankton, acritarch, bacteria and solid bitumen. Graptolite is the main contributor to TOC, but the shale gas is mainly derived from hydrogen-rich organic matter such as phytoplankton, acritarch and pyrolysis of liquid hydrocarbons produced by hydrogen-rich organic matter. (2) Organic pores, as principal reservoir space for shale gas, exist in hydrogen-rich organic matter and solid bitumen. The graptolites and plenty of other organic matter stacking distribution in lamina provide both reservoir space for supplement and effective pathways of connected pores for shale gas. (3) Shale gas in Fuling region is in supercritical state and dominated by free gas. The match of formation time of closed shale gas system and gas-generation peak, as well as slight alteration degree of sealing conditions in the later stage, are key factors controlling the retention and accumulation of shale gas in the regions with high thermal maturity and complex tectonic background. Adsorption, capillary sealing and slow diffusion of shale are the main microscopic mechanisms for the retention and accumulation of shale gas. It thus can be seen that the generation and accumulation of marine shale gas with high thermal maturity in complex structure areas is controlled jointly by anoxic depositional environment, excellent hydrocarbon rock quality, superior reservoir space and favorable sealing conditions.

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